As promised in my post here and at least showed interest in the topic, more Leverage Notes are coming:
đź”— @uwelang/between-jobs-still-thinking-about-sales-marketing-and-ai
Leverage Notes #2 — AI doesn’t replace sales judgment. It exposes weak patterns faster.
One underestimated effect of AI in sales isn’t better speed or automation.
It’s accountability and clarity.
For years, teams could reasonably say things like:
“We didn’t see the risk coming.”
“The data wasn’t conclusive.”
“The forecast felt strong.”
AI changes that.
Today, weak signals often show up much earlier in the process:
repeated meetings without progress
stakeholders who never escalate beyond the initial conversation
opportunities where no economic buyer is visible
pipelines that look healthy only because no one questions them
I’ve worked with teams that have access to the same AI tools, yet behave very differently.
The split wasn’t technology — it was judgment.
- Who was willing to disqualify a campaign early?
- Who chose honest signals over hope?
- Who corrected the plan when patterns diverged?
AI doesn’t make you smarter.
It shortens the distance between bad judgment and visible consequence.
That’s leverage — if you’re willing to look.